Anyone know who (if anyone) played with Tupac?

Some of the bass tones on a lot of stuff is really good, and I doubt all of it is synths. One that comes to mind is "I ain't mad at cha". Awesome growly, thick tone. It could be synth, but it just doesn't quite seem like it.
That and the bass tone on a lot of songs seems very similar, and played in a manner that would make me think it is an actual bass.
-Can we not turn this into a "hip-hop sucks, no it doesn't" thread? It is clear hip-hop is now a part of the musical landscape, and not going anywhere. There are some excellent artists in the mess of commercialized crap. Even if Tupac is a little older.

Some of the bass tones on a lot of stuff is really good, and I doubt all of it is synths. One that comes to mind is "I ain't mad at cha". Awesome growly, thick tone. It could be synth, but it just doesn't quite seem like it.
That and the bass tone on a lot of songs seems very similar, and played in a manner that would make me think it is an actual bass.
-Can we not turn this into a "hip-hop sucks, no it doesn't" thread? It is clear hip-hop is now a part of the musical landscape, and not going anywhere. There are some excellent artists in the mess of commercialized crap. Even if Tupac is a little older.

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Too bad he's dead eh?
I dunno much about him, nor his "bass player" if he had one though... it'd be interesting to find out.

Tupac actually played the bass on most of his records. If I remember correctly he played the bass on the song. I don't know if he had a bass player for his live shows or not. Be he could lay down the groove when it was needed.

umm i know tupac HELD a bass in a movie he did,tupac playing bass on his tracks? i don't think so.'pac used a varity of producers,dr dre,daz dillinger,scott storch ect most of his hit's were sample based or replay's(i ain't mad a cha,how do you want it )now the flood of stuff released after his death may have some live bass on it but of course he didn't play it.

I'm not sure about Tupac, but I do know that in a lot of The Notorious BIG's stuff, the bass track is unmistakeably a Fender jazz bass... you can hear it clear as day too, it's especially present on "Juicy" (a classic, BTW). A lot of these songs have the same bass part played over and over, so they could using samples that are looped.

for some reason i started playing a lot of hiphop songs from dre and tupac. from tupac i liked "hit 'em up" the most, but i think that track is from an older rap song. does anyone know the name of that song and by who it is if it's true?

"let me ride" has a kick ass bass line on it too by dre. but i don't know what songs are and aren't sampled from older stuff, since they tend to do that a lot in hip hop, eh, i still like it though. nice grooves they got.

rap is a great genre of music if you can get into it, and ignore the pop crap that is around today. They bass lines can be really good, and help you groove really well. I know that Juan, the mars volta bassist, is a big fan of rap basslines, and he used to play them loads.

Who is that guy who does all the bass for Dre? He had an interview in a BAss player maybee about a month ago, and he is also in the advertisment for the new Line 6 basses. umm ...Mike Elizondo. It says in the magazine,Bass Player January 2005, that he played with SNoop, Dre, Eminem, 50 Cent, Busta Rhymes and Fiona Apple,plus many more. But i would of thoought he played for Tupac, but im not sure.

"let me ride" has a kick ass bass line on it too by dre. but i don't know what songs are and aren't sampled from older stuff, since they tend to do that a lot in hip hop, eh, i still like it though. nice grooves they got.

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"Let Me Ride" was built on a sample from the B section of "Mothership Connection" by Parliament. There's probably live bass on it, because the line is different, and Dre does use musicians in the studio (as well as being a musician himself, playing the screeching synth lines he's known for).